Description

Poetry. "If it's indeed darkest before the dawn, then we should immerse ourselves in Joseph Harrington's OF SOME SKY and hope—because it doesn't get much darker than this. This book surveys the terrain we inhabit now (in the mid-Anthropocene) somewhere between the devil and the rising seas. From here we can wave to 'The Three Species / still in syndication.' Harrington presents us with an elegant sequence of double-binds or conundrums. They are strangely satisfying, even as we realize we are consuming our own futures."—Rae Armantrout

"One of the most nuanced and historically sensitive documentarian poets currently working in the U.S., Joseph Harrington turns to ecological matters in his latest volume. Braiding insights from post-structural theory with perceptions of the natural world, adding a strand of self-deprecating wit devoted to the agon and illusions of the writing process itself, OF SOME SKY is a compelling critique of...of the death of the earth and the self-involvement and inadequacy of the individual subject. It is also exceptionally beautiful elegiac poetry."—Maria Damon

"Nature poetry has tended either toward celebration of transcendent truths or toward nostalgia and loss (there goes the forest). But I cannot think of a poet other than Joseph Harrington whose nature poems come with such a mordant sense of humor. He knows, with bitter wisdom, that 'you must destroy something / to feel nostalgia for it.' Unlike many eco-poets, his call to direct action is skeptical, self-knowing. There is joy to be found in his plays on words: 'I dare you to mine the gap / between uranium and geranium.' But it's a long fall from the Romantics. This is an honest book, if not a hopeful one."—Susan M. Schultz

"What to do when the sky is actually falling? Why not ignore Chicken Little and celebrate Earth Day! Lucky for us, the poems in Joseph Harrington's OF SOME SKY have other plans. Harrington takes us on a wild cruise through what we are left with: 'machines that run, all the time, feeding themselves.' In a poetic style of vernacular with a touch of Joy Williams, the tone reveals how each bird represents each of us, 'not spring- / ing just falling / off the / edge of / one's life.' Welcome to the last epoch. Our hands are soaking in it."—Dennis Etzel Jr.

Reviews

Author Bio

Joseph Harrington is the author of Things Come On (an amneoir) (Wesleyan), a mixed-genre work relating the twinned narratives of the Watergate scandal and his mother's cancer; the chapbooks Goodnight Whoever's Listening (Essay Press) and Earth Day Suite (Beard of Bees); and the critical work Poetry and the Public (Wesleyan). His work has appeared in BAX: The Best American Experimental Writing 2016, Hotel Amerika, Colorado Review, Fact-Simile and Atticus Review, among others. He teaches at the University of Kansas, in Lawrence, America, where he lives in Prairie Meadows — a redundancy that does not describe what is there now.